Brian Aldiss on A.I.

Steven Spielberg's film AI opened in Britain on 21 September. The author of the original story, science fiction writer Brian Aldiss, was never asked to a preview screening--so New Scientist arranged for him to see it. Here Aldiss describes his part in the evolution of the film, lays out his vision for the future of artificial intelligence and asks whether human consciousness could ever be programmed into a machine.
For the rest go here.Brian Aldiss about AI
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Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation http://apacure.org/

[Edited last by Norm on September 25, 2001 at 04:25 PM][Link corrected - Cees Alons][Edited last by Cees Alons on September 26, 2001 at 11:51 AM]

Norm, thanks for the link - that was an interesting article.
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He thought on homeland, the big timber, the air thin and chill all the year long. Tulip poplars so big through the trunk they put you in mind of locomotives set on end. He thought of getting home and building him a cabin on Cold Mountain so high that not a soul but the nighthawks passing across the clouds in autumn could hear his sad cry. Of living a life so quiet he would not need ears. And if Ada would go with him, there might be the hope, so far off in the distance he did not even really see it, that in time his despair might be honed off to a point so fine and thin that it would be nearly the same as vanishing.
-- Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain

To be truthful, it is a short story, not a book.
The article itself seemed to be more about how Brian's views have changed since he wrote that story all of those years ago rather than the movie itself.
Jason
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